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PATIENT SATISFACTION WITH ORTHOPEDIC AND PROSTHETIC MEDICAL DEVICES

CBU International Conference on Innovation in Science and Education

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Title PATIENT SATISFACTION WITH ORTHOPEDIC AND PROSTHETIC MEDICAL DEVICES
 
Creator Malovecká, Ivona; Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Organization and Management in Pharmacy, Comenius University in Bratislava
Mináriková, Daniela; Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Organization and Management in Pharmacy, Comenius University in Bratislava
Foltán, Viliam; Faculty of Pharmacy, Department of Organization and Management in Pharmacy, Comenius University in Bratislava
 
Subject Orthopedics, prosthetic, medical device, patient satisfaction, quality, patient quality of life, quality management, health care provider
 
Description Collecting information about patient satisfaction with orthopedic and prosthetic medical devices in terms of utility, tolerance, and compliance is essential for verifying and improving the quality of these devices. In addition, such information is useful for improving the patients’ quality of life, and the quality management systems of health care providers. This study assessed patient satisfaction with these devices from a sample of patients with orthopedic, neurologic, and rheumatic diseases at the Specialized Hospital for Orthopedic Prosthetics and at the premises of the Dispenser of Orthopedic and Prosthetic Medical Devices, both in Bratislava in the Slovak Republic. The assessment involved a translated and validated questionnaire about patient satisfaction with orthopedic and prosthetic medical devices to evaluate key factors of weight, fit, appearance, comfort, pain free, free of abrasiveness, ease of application, and durability of each device. The study samples consisted of patients with lower limb problems (42.5%), spine problems (26.9%), and a combination of leg and spine issues (25.9%). Orthopedic disease occurred in 73.6% of these patients, a combination of orthopedic and neurologic disease in 13.5%, and neurologic disease in 7.3%. Orthopedic insoles (36.3%), hip belts (17.6%), and the corset on the spine (5.2%) were the most used devices. Overall, the medical devices rated highly, with a high proportion of patients voting “strongly satisfied” in five of the eight key factors (range 51.8 to 63.2%), followed by a moderately lower proportion for durability (43.5%), comfort (37.3%), and appearance (31.1%). The comfort in wearing the device received the greatest patient dissatisfaction (22.8% of patients), followed by appearance (12.4%), and then fit (7.3%).
 
Publisher Central Bohemia University, o.p.s.
 
Contributor Comenius University in Bratislava Science Park supported by the Research and Development Operational Programme funded by the ERDF / Grant number: ITMS 26240220086. Project is co-financed from EU sources.
 
Date 2015-09-19
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://ojs.journals.cz/index.php/CBUConference2013/article/view/632
10.12955/cbup.v3.632
 
Source CBU International Conference Proceedings; Vol 3 (2015): CBU International Conference Proceedings 2015; 419-426
1805-9961
1805-997X
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://ojs.journals.cz/index.php/CBUConference2013/article/view/632/586
 
Rights Copyright (c) 2015 Ivona Malovecká, Daniela Mináriková, Viliam Foltán
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/